Free tool

Turn your notes into Anki flashcards.

Paste your lecture notes, study summaries, or any text and convert them into testable Anki cards. Free, no account needed.

Try it — paste your notes and generate cards

Switch to the "Paste text" tab in the generator. Your notes stay in the browser and are never sent to storage.

Open the generator

How to use it

Paste the raw notesYou don't need to clean them up. The tool handles bullet points, numbered lists, dense paragraphs, and mixed formats.
Pick a domainChoose the subject area — medical, nursing, science, CS, law, language, or general — so the prompting matches your field.
Choose a card styleBasic for definitions and comparisons. Cloze for formulas, sequences, and facts embedded in context. Mixed to let the tool decide.
Generate and exportCards are ready in under a minute. Export as .apkg to import directly into Anki, or as CSV/TSV for any other flashcard app.

What kinds of notes work best?

The tool works well with any text that contains testable facts: lecture transcripts, textbook summaries, annotated outlines, vocabulary lists, study guides, and clinical reference notes.

Shorter, focused inputs produce better cards than dumping an entire semester's worth of notes at once. Aim for one topic or lecture at a time — 500 to 5,000 words is the sweet spot. The card count field lets you control how many cards come out.

You don't need to pre-format or clean up your notes. The tool handles messy text. But if your notes contain a lot of instructor-specific shorthand, adding a sentence of context at the top helps it interpret the abbreviations correctly.

Notes to Anki — for specific subjects

The domain selector in the generator adjusts how cards are written for your subject area:

  • Medical / USMLE — Clinical stems, board-style questions, drug–mechanism pairs
  • Nursing / NCLEX — Priority, delegation, clinical scenario stems
  • Science — Pathway sequences, definitions, cause-and-effect
  • Computer science — Algorithms, tradeoffs, syntax, Big-O notation
  • Language — Term, definition, and example-based bidirectional cards
  • Law — Case → holding, elements of offenses, rule → exception patterns
  • History — Cause → effect, chronological sequences, events and dates
Ready to try it?

Paste your notes, generate cards, and export to Anki. Free, no login.

Open the generator